Mountaineering on enclosed terrain, the young doctor Clara Lang discovers a mummified corpse. Apparently, the dead has been in the ice for years. No one knows who it is at the bottom of the valley. When Clara's friend David wants to inspect the site more closely, he too is deadly. Clara is devastated. Her grief is compounded by the suspicion that David was murdered. Abandoned by the authorities, Clara stretches out her tentacles on her own and begins to investigate.
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Reviews
To me, this movie is perfection.
This is a must-see and one of the best documentaries - and films - of this year.
True to its essence, the characters remain on the same line and manage to entertain the viewer, each highlighting their own distinctive qualities or touches.
The movie really just wants to entertain people.
It start's as an interesting thriller in a really great mountains scenery. However, at the end everything is just hysterically exaggerated, and far away from facts and figures: radioactive waste comes as saturated blood-red liquid, then (invisibly) appears in clear rock-water, and just a few minutes after you take a sip, your skin shows distinct signs of severe radiation syndrome; alarm sirens give a nuclear air raid alarm for the village, radioactive decontamination teams clean-up civilians under a (single) mobile shower (against the contamination with radioactive rock-water they drunk!), while TV journalists ask folks how they feel: "Oh, I feel so sick. Yes, me too, I am so radio-sick! "So this is a lesson for kids to learn: if it looks green, it's poison, if it looks red, it's radioactive poison. – OMG!